Tag: NTUC

  • Desmond Choo Returns To NTUC, Likely To Take Over Mah Bow Tan

    Desmond Choo Returns To NTUC, Likely To Take Over Mah Bow Tan

    Mr Desmond Choo is rejoining the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC).

    The 37-year-old, who resigned from NTUC in May 2013 as its deputy director of industrial relations, is set to make a comeback as NTUC’s new director of youth development next month, after a foray into the private sector.

    Besides the new post, he will also be appointed deputy director of industrial relations, and will be involved in other aspects of union work such as implementing wage ladders for industry sectors, said NTUC in a statement.

    Mr Choo quit after failing to win the Hougang single constituency seat in the 2011 General Election, and again in the 2012 By-election.

    While his return to NTUC could see Mr Choo being fielded again by the People’s Action Party (PAP) as a labour candidate at the next General Election, it is unlikely that he will be returning to contest the Hougang seat, which has been a Worker’s Party stronghold since 1991.

    In September last year, Mr Choo was named as the second adviser to grassroots organisations in Tampines East, a ward in Tampines GRC. The ward’s MP is former national development minister Mah Bow Tan, 67, who stepped down from the Cabinet after the 2011 elections.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Be Careful Of This PRC Scamming Customers At NTUC

    Be Careful Of This PRC Scamming Customers At NTUC

    UPDATE:

    Miss Norsiah has since updated her facebook page to explain that NTUC has confirmed that there is no 30c charge on the exchange of notes to coins but they are unable to do anything against the PRC woman involved.

    They explained that their cameras aren’t good enough and they have no audio to verify what happened:

    NTUC called………that staff will b closely monitored n observed only…………………….because their camera cannot zoom in & see the $1.70 (new $1 coin, new 50cents coin 20cents coin) & also no voice recorder to record conversation…that staff will b send for conversational english coz she claims she dont understand wat im saying!!!

    BUT surprisingly she knows how 2 take my $2 & return me $1.70 when i ask her for coin exchange & surprisingly too, she knows how 2 use NTUC name to say NTUC now charge 4 coins exchange!!! I guess she doesnt know the meaning of “receipt” dats y when i ask her receipt for 30cents (3times) she doesnt know……so sad……….

    “receipt” i think the basic she need to know if in sales line….funny…..dont understand receipt but know how to say “FORGET” to return my 30cents……..so, in conclusion, they will still keep that staff!!

    So, NTUC shoppers, take note that as confirmed by NTUC, no 30cents will be charge for coins exchange.

    So NTUC shoppers, beware of this desperado, money-faced china-lai woman!!

    —-

    Dear TRS,

    Please be careful about this PRC cheat at NTUC and remind your readers to be vigilant of other, similar scams.

    I saw this photo being shared online showing that a woman, apparently a PRC, was trying to scam customers at NTUC.

    When one lady approached to change her $2 note for coins so she could get a trolley, the PRC staff at the customer service counter gave her $1.70 and claimed that there was a 30c charge for exchanging.

    When the woman came back a short while later asking for a receipt, the PRC woman act blur and then say she ‘forgot’ to give her 30c.

    How can NTUC allow such foreign staff with no integrity come here and essentially try and steal money?

    Please be careful of such scams. Even though the money might be small, if this type of scam is allowed to happen we are letting our image as a safe and law abiding country go down the drain.

    MM

    TRS Contributor

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Dear PM Can You Pass Me Your Minister?

    Dear PM Can You Pass Me Your Minister?

    I wonder which country in the world has a labour movement which writes to the head of Government to ask that he release an office-holder so that the man can vie for office in the…labour movement. But I guess it’s better than the parachuting of an unknown into a big office on someone’s say-so.

    It says much about the symbiotic relationship between the G (or is it the People’s Action Party?) and the NTUC, that no one has said anything about the above “poaching’’ process. One guess is that the concept is so in-grained or well accepted  that nobody talks about it anymore. The vision of the union and the G is aligned, and leaders move in and out. They even maintain offices on both sides of a (non-existent) fence!

    So Mr Chan Chun Sing is the man of the moment. The PM has said okay and Mr Chan has to win the votes of delegates in October to get the top job of secretary-general. We all know that the head of the NTUC has to be politically acceptable. As well as the ability to win the hearts and minds of workers. So both have to go together.

    There is a precedent in the form of Mr Lim Chee Onn, once the flavor of the month and among the front-runners for the premiership. Although he got the top job with the blessings of the political leadership, he was removed as the secretary-general because his leadership style rankled on the rank-and-file. I’m basing this on memory because I’m having a hard time researching the background. I’m not sure if he was removed at a conference or simply told to step aside in favour of someone more palatable, in this case, the late president Ong Teng Cheong.

    I am among those who were surprised at the choice of the NTUC central committee. MSM reports that even unionists were surprised. In fact, I am more surprised that there has been no successor groomed for Mr Lim Swee Say’s job after all these years. Nobody knew that Mr Lim was going to turn 62 soon and has to retire? Its current crop of deputy/assistant sec-gens not good enough?

    As for the choice of Mr Chan, the surprise is that a career civil servant whose only experience has been in one “unique” sector, the military, should have been the choice of the key union leaders. Perhaps, it is because he heads the Ministry of Social and Family Development, which deals with bread-and-butter issues of the less privileged that makes top union leaders think he is a good choice? It cannot only be because he drinks coffee with taxi-drivers; he’s an advisor to the taxi drivers’ unions. Or because he can adopt as folksy a manner as Mr Lim?

    All I can say is that we seem to have an amazing paucity of talent, so much so that established institutions here have to raid each other, like companies poaching in the private sector. Or is there a bigger, long-term objective in sight, such as Mr Chan is being tested for an even bigger job. Much as Mr Lim Chee Onn was. Getting the endorsement of the labour movement, which has nearly one million members, is a big deal. Given that Mr Chan is a first-term MP, you might call this “hot housing’’.

    Okay, I am rambling. Sorry.

    Anyway, I have always liked Mr Lim Swee Say, since the days he was an officer in the Economic Development Board. Power and position hasn’t changed him one bit. I liked him even more in the past few years for what he was doing for the labour movement. For too long, I’ve always thought the NTUC was placing too much focus on the “social’’ aspects of its mission, such as setting up its “finest’’ supermarkets and pre-skools which it can’t spel, instead of the “organising’’ aspects of a trade union. It should be looking at wages, recruitment and workplace practices. I blame the union for not detecting the long stagnation of wages at the lowest levels.

    But I can see more “organizing’’ work done in recent time. It has managed to pry open the two integrated resorts and unionized their workers. It has tried to rectify the low wages of some sectors by combining a wage floor with a productivity ladder. It has pushed for $50 salary raises within the National Wages Council. And it has finally managed to get PMEs under the labour movement’s umbrella. I still think it needs to do a better job of selling the “re-hiring’’ of older workers to the people. That is not about working till you drop dead, but about being able to work beyond a certain age if you want to.

    It has also always been a source of wonder to me that the NTUC does not have its own labour experts in a strategic policy unit who can crunch the numbers on wages and employment. The labour movement should be leading the charge, rather than depend on the statistics and pronouncements of the Manpower ministry.

    If Mr Chan does get the vote in October, I hope that he will carry on the organizing aspects of the movement. After all, he has headed a big organization like the military and is now the PAP organizing secretary. Perhaps, under his charge, the NTUC will be the first thing that comes to the minds of workers who feel they have been short-changed in some way. And that it is not just a place to buy groceries.

    It remains for me to wish Mr Lim and Mr Chan all the best!

     

    Source: https://berthahenson.wordpress.com

  • Chan Chun Sing to Join NTUC

    Chan Chun Sing to Join NTUC

    Singapore’s Minister for Social and Family Development Chan Chun Sing on Friday joined the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC), in a move widely seen as his imminent takeover as labour chief later this year, when Lim Swee Say steps down.

    He will be co-opted into its central committee on 27 January, and will be appointed the role of Deputy Secretary-General, according to local media.

    The news of Chan joining the NTUC was posted on its website alongside correspondence between the 17-member committee and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. The committee had written to PM Lee in a letter dated Friday to request his release of Chan, one of the youngest ministers of Singapore’s current cabinet. The letter explained that current labour chief Lim Swee Say will not be able to serve another four-year term in office as he will turn 62 in July next year.

    Letter From NTUC to PM

     

    “We would therefore like to put in place the succession for the NTUC Secretary-General, preferably a few months ahead of the National Delegates’ Conference (in October), to pave the way for election by Delegates at the said Conference,” the committee wrote. “After careful deliberation, the Committee unanimously agrees that Minister Chan Chun Sing is a suitable Cabinet Minister who can strengthen labour leadership at the NTUC and the link between the labour movement and the Government.”

    Letter from PM To NTUC

    In a reply dated Friday as well, PM Lee said he would allow Chan to join the NTUC immediately on a part-time basis and full-time from 1 April onwards.

    “For now Chun Sing will continue in MSF (and MINDEF, where he is Second Minister). But he will leave gaps when he goes over to NTUC full-time in April. I will announce Cabinet changes to fill the vacancies after the Budget session,” he added in a Facebook post on Friday evening.

    In his first comments following the announcement, Chan wrote on his Facebook page that he was “humbled” for the opportunity to serve the labour movement.

    “There is much to learn. I look forward to working closely with the tripartite partners to advance our cause to care for all workers,” he said.

    He also expressed his appreciation to his ministry staff, whom he worked with for the past four years as acting and then full minister.

    “I’ve no doubt that they will continue to strive unwaveringly to improve the lives of all Singaporeans, especially the less privileged ones,” he added.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • NTUC Beri Tumpuan Kepada Kaum Ibu

    Google Images
    Google Images

    Patrick Tay dari NTUC telah memberikan satu hujah di Parlimen, menggesa masyarakat dan pemerintah untuk mengiktiraf dan memberikan ganjaran yang lebih kepada golongan suri rumah, atau “Stay-At-Home-Mothers. “

    Beliau mula dengan memberikan sedikit later belakang mengenai golongan tersebut:

    “Satu golongan yang sering kurang diberi perhatian dan bantuan adalah golongan ibu yang tinggal di rumah sepenuh masa. Pada 2013, terdapat sekurang-kurangnya 312,000 wanita yang tidak bekerja kerana menjaga anak dan juga menguruskan rumahtangga mereka. Namun, perhatian tentang peranan penting yang dimainkan golongan ini dalam menyokong sesebuah unit keluarga, yang juga kadang kala meliputi rangkaian keluarga yang lebih besar, masih agak berkurangan dari perintah dan juga masyarakat. 

    Selanjutnya, berikut adalah 10 isi kandungan dari ucapan beliau:

    10. Golongan SAHM tidak seharusnya dilihat sebagai golongan yang tidak produktif dan kurang menyumbang kepada masyarakat.

    9. Masyarakat dan pemerintah harus mengiktiraf, memberi ganjaran dan memberi jaminan kepada golongan SAHM.

    8. Dasar-dasar perlu disasarkan dikukuhkan agar bantuan dapat diberikan pada tahap-tahap penting sepanjang pembangunan anak-anak mereka.

    7. Kita perlu mencari jalan untuk membiayai usaha-usaha pro-keluarga , yang dapat meningkatkan lagi kefahaman serta pengiktirafan nilai ekonomi dan sosial yang ditunjukkan golongan ini.  

    6. Kini, masih belum ada subsidi pengangkutan bagi golongan SAHM. Mereka terpaksa membawa anak-anak mereka ketika melakukan pelbagai kerja-kerja rumah untuk keluarga. Subsidi harus disertakan dalam Pakej Perkahwinan dan Keibubapaan.

    5. Dasar-dasar kita harus memastikan yang setiap bantuan danfaedah yang telah dimanfaatkan golongan ibu yang bekerja, juga diberikan kepada ibu yang tinggal di rumah.

    4. Pelepasan cukai dan rebat bagi golongan SAHM boleh diperbaiki. Pelepasan bagi Ibu Bekerja dan Anak (WMCR) boleh dilanjutkan kepada golongan SAHM, dan pelepasan ini boleh dikongsi dengan pasangan mereka untuk meringankan beban bagi keluarga berpendapatan tunggal.   

    3. Keperluan perubatan pada masa depan harus dipertimbangkan. Ibu-ibu sepenuh masa tidak mempunyai sumbangan CPF dan Medisave yang tetap.Golongan SAHM perlu diberikan tokokan sumbangan pada akaun Medisave dan Akaun Khas mereka.

    2. Bagi wanita yang bergantung kepada sumbangan suami untuk sumbangan akaun CPF mereka, pemerintah harus memberikan sumbangan sepadan bagi setiap jumlah yang disalurkan kepada CPF mereka. 

    1. Syarikat-syarikat digalakkan untuk menimbangkan dan menawarkan pekerjaan separuh masa dan juga secara bebas bagi golongan SAHM,serta menyokong program-program kembali bekerja bagi golongan ini. Mereka perlu diberikan pelbagai pilihan yang ada untuk membantu menambah pendapatan keluarga mereka.

    Patrick mengakhiri ucapannya dengan kata-kata ini:

    “Golongan suri rumah mempunyai kerjaya utama yang unggul. Semua kerjaya lain wujud untuk satu tujuan sahaja – iaitu untuk menyokong kerjaya yang unggul “. Saya ingin memaklumi, mengiktiraf dan menyanjung semua ibu-ibu, terutamanya golongan ibu-ibu yang tinggal di rumah! Terima kasih kerana telah  membesarkan satu generasi rakyat Singapura! “

     

     

    Sumber: fivestarsandamoon, Athena Croft